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THE FALL
Genesis 3
PROFOUND as the teaching of this narrative is, its meaning does
not lie on the surface. Literal interpretation will reach a measure
of its significance, but plainly there is more here than appears in
the letter. When we read that the serpent was more subtile than any
beast of the field which the Lord God had made, and that he tempted
the woman, we at once perceive that it is not with the outer husk of
the story we are to concern ourselves, but with the kernel. The
narrative throughout speaks of nothing but the brute serpent; not a
word is said of the devil, not the slightest hint is given that the
machinations of a fallen angel are signified. The serpent is
compared to the other beasts of the field, showing that it is the
brute serpent that is spoken of. The curse is pronounced on the
beast, not on a fallen spirit summoned for the purpose before the
Supreme; and not in terms which could apply to a fallen spirit, but
in terms that are applicable only to the serpent that crawls. Yet
every reader feels that this is not the whole mystery of the fall of
man: moral evil cannot be accounted for by referring it to a brute
source. No one, I suppose, believes that the whole tribe of serpents
crawl as a punishment of an offence committed by one of their
number, or that the whole iniquity and sorrow of the world are due
to an actual serpent. Plainly this is merely a pictorial
representation intended to convey, some general impressions and
ideas. Vitally important truths underlie the narrative and are
bodied forth by it; but the way to reach these truths is not to
adhere too rigidly to the literal meaning, but to catch the general
impression which it seems fitted to make.
No doubt this opens the door to a great variety of interpretation.
No two men will attach to it precisely the same meaning. One says,
the serpent is a symbol for Satan, but Adam and Eve are historical
persons. Another says, the tree of the knowledge of good and evil is
a figure, but the driving out from the garden is real. Another
maintains that the whole is a picture, putting in a visible,
intelligible shape certain vitally important truths regarding the
history of our race. So that every man is left very much to his own
judgment, to read the narrative candidly and in such light from
other sources as he has, and let it make its own impression upon
him. This would be a sad result if the object of the Bible were to
bring us all to a rigid uniformity of belief in all matters; but the
object of the Bible is not that, but the far higher object of
furnishing all varieties of men with sufficient light to lead them
to God. And this being so, variety of interpretation in details is
not to be lamented. The very purpose of such representations as are
here given is to suit all stages of mental and spiritual
advancement. Let the child read it and he will learn what will live
in his mind and influence him all his life. Let the devout man who
has ranged through all science and history and philosophy come back
to this narrative, and he feels that he has here the essential truth
regarding the beginnings of man’s tragical career upon earth.
We should, in my opinion, be labouring under a misapprehension if we
supposed that none even of the earliest readers of this account saw
the deeper meaning of it. When men who felt the misery of sin and
lifted up their hearts to God for deliverance, read the words
addressed to the serpent, "I will put enmity between thee and the
woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head,
and thou shalt bruise his heel" - is it reasonable to suppose that
such men would take these words in their literal sense, and satisfy
themselves with the assurance that serpents, though dangerous, would
be kept under, and would find in the words no assurance of that very
thing they themselves were all their lifetime striving after,
deliverance from the evil thing which lay at the root of all sin? No
doubt some would accept the story in its literal meaning, -shallow
and careless men, whose own spiritual experience never urged them to
see any spiritual significance in the words, would do so; but even
those who saw least in the story, and put a very shallow
interpretation on its details, could scarcely fail to see its main
teaching.
The reader of this perennially fresh story is first of all struck
with the account given of man’s primitive condition. Coming to this
narrative with our minds coloured by the fancies of poets and
philosophers, we are almost startled by the check which the plain
and sober statements of this account give to an unpruned fancy. We
have to read the words again and again to make sure we have not
omitted something which gives support to those glowing descriptions
of man’s primitive condition. Certainly he is described as innocent
and at peace with God, and in this respect no terms can exaggerate
his happiness. But in other respects the language of the Bible is
surprisingly moderate. Man is represented as living on fruit, and as
going unclothed, and, so far as appears, without any artificial
shelter either from the heat of the sun or the cold of night. None
of the arts were as yet known. All working of metals had yet to be
discovered, so that his tools must have been of the rudest possible
description; and the arts, such as music, which adorn life and make
leisure enjoyable, were also still in the future.
But the most significant elements in man’s primitive condition are
represented by the two trees of the garden; by trees, because with
plants alone he had to do. In the centre of the garden stood the
tree of life, the fruit of which bestowed immortality. Man was
therefore naturally mortal, though apparently with a capacity for
immortality. How this capacity would have actually carried man on to
immortality had he not sinned, it is vain to conjecture. The
mystical nature of the tree of life is fully recognised in the New
Testament, by our Lord, when He says: "To him that overcometh wilt I
give to eat of the tree of life, which is in the midst of the
Paradise of God"; and by John, when he describes the new Jerusalem:
"In the midst of the street of it, and on either side of the river,
was there the tree of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and
yielded her fruit every month: and the leaves of the tree were for
the healing of the nations." Both these representations are intended
to convey, in a striking and pictorial form, the promise of life
everlasting. And as of the tree of life which stands in the Paradise
of the future it is said "Blessed are they that do His commandments,
that they may have right to the tree of life"; so in Eden man’s
immortality was suspended on the condition of obedience. And the
trial of man’s obedience is imaged in the other tree, the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil. From the child-like innocence in
which man originally was, he was to pass forward into the condition
of moral manhood, which consists not in mere innocence, but in
innocence maintained in presence of temptation. The savage is
innocent of many of the crimes of civilised men because he has no
opportunity to commit them; the child is innocent of some of the
vices of manhood because he has no temptation to them. But this
innocence is the result of circumstance, not of character; and if
savage or child is to become a mature moral being he must be tried
by altered circumstances, by temptation and opportunity. To carry
man forward to this higher stage trial is necessary, and this trial
is indicated by the tree of knowledge. The fruit of this tree is
prohibited, to indicate that it is only in presence of what is
forbidden man can be morally tested, and that it is only by
self-command and obedience to law, and not by the mere following of
instincts, that man can attain to moral maturity. The prohibition is
that which makes him recognise a distinction between good and evil.
He is put in a position in which good is not the only thing he can
do; an alternative is present to his mind, and the choice of good in
preference to evil is made possible to him. In presence of this tree
childlike innocence was no longer possible. The self-determination
of manhood was constantly required. Conscience, hitherto latent, was
now evoked and took its place as man’s supreme faculty.
It is in vain to think of exhausting this narrative. We can, at the
most, only remark upon some of the most salient points.
(1) Temptation comes like a serpent; like the most subtile beast of
the field; like that one creature which is said to exert a
fascinating influence on its victims, fastening them with its
glittering eye, stealing upon them by its noiseless, low, and unseen
approach, perplexing them by its wide circling folds, seeming to
come upon them from all sides at once, and armed not like the other
beasts with one weapon of offence-horn, or hoof, or teeth - but
capable of crushing its victim with every part of its sinuous
length. It lies apparently dead for months together, but when roused
it can, as the naturalist tells us, "outclimb the monkey, outswim
the fish, out-leap the zebra, outwrestle the athlete, and crush the
tiger." How naturally in describing temptation do we borrow language
from the aspect and movements of this creature. It does not need to
hunt down its victims by long-continued pursuit, its victims come
and put themselves within its reach. Unseen, temptation lies by our
path, and before we have time to think we are fascinated and
bewildered, its coils rapidly gather round us and its stroke flashes
poison through our blood. Against sin, when once it has wreathed
itself around us, we seem helpless to contend; the very powers with
which we could resist are benumbed or pinned useless to our side-our
foe seems all round us, and to extricate one part is but to become
entangled in another. As the serpent finds its way everywhere, over
every fence or barrier, into every corner and recess, so it is
impossible to keep temptation out of the life; it appears where
least we expect it and when we think ourselves secure.
(2) Temptation succeeds at first by exciting our curiosity. It is a
wise saying that "our great security against sin lies in being
shocked at it. Eve gazed and reflected when she should have fled."
The serpent created an interest, excited her curiosity about this
forbidden fruit. And as this excited curiosity lies near the
beginning of sin in the race, so does it in the individual. I
suppose if you trace back the mystery of iniquity in your own life
and seek to track it to its source, you will find it to have
originated in this craving to taste evil. No man originally meant to
become the sinner he has become. He only intended, like Eve, to
taste. It was a voyage of discovery he meant to make; he did not
think to get nipped and frozen up and never more return from the
outer cold and darkness. He wished before finally giving himself to
virtue, to see the real value of the other alternative.
This dangerous craving has many elements in it. There is in it the
instinctive drawing towards what is mysterious. One veiled figure in
an assembly will attract more scrutiny than the most admired beauty.
An appearance in the heavens that no one can account for will
nightly draw more eyes than the most wonderful sunset. To lift
veils, to penetrate disguises, to unravel complicated plots, to
solve mysteries, this is always inviting to the human mind. The tale
which used to thrill us in childhood, of the one locked room, the
one forbidden key, bears in it a truth for men as well as for
children. What is hidden must, we conclude, have some interest for
us-else why hide it from us? What is forbidden must have some
important bearing upon us. Else why forbid it? Things which are
indifferent to us are left in our way, obvious, and without
concealment. But as action has been taken regarding the things that
are forbidden, action in view of our relation to them, it is natural
to us to desire to know what these things are and how they affect
us.
There is added to this in young persons, a sense of incompleteness.
They wish to be grown up. Few boys wish to be always boys. They long
for the signs of manhood, and seek to possess that knowledge of life
and its ways which they very much identify with manhood. But too
commonly they mistake the path to manhood. They feel as if they had
a wider range of liberty and were more thoroughly men when they
transgress the limits assigned by conscience. They feel as if there
were a new and brighter world outside that which is fenced round by
strict morality, and they tremble with excitement on its borders. It
is a fatal delusion. Only by choosing the good in presence of the
evil are true manhood and real maturity gained. True manliness
consists mainly in self-control, in a patient waiting upon nature
and God’s law, and when youth impatiently breaks through the
protecting fence of God’s law, and seeks growth by knowing evil, it
misses that very advancement it seeks, and cheats itself out of the
manhood it apes.
(3) Through this craving for an enlarged experience unbelief in
God’s goodness finds entrance. In the presence of forbidden pleasure
we are tempted to feel as if God were grudging us enjoyment. The
very arguments of the serpent occur to our mind. No harm will come
of our indulging; the prohibition is needless, unreasonable, and
unkind; it is not based on any genuine desire for our welfare. This
fence that shuts us out from knowing good and evil is erected by a
timorous asceticism, by a ridiculous misconception of what truly
enlarges human nature; it shuts us into a poor narrow life. And thus
suspicions of God’s perfect wisdom and goodness find entrance; we
begin to think we know better than He what is good for us, and can
contrive a richer, happier life than He has provided for us. Our
loyalty to Him is loosened, and already we have lost hold of His
strength and are launched on the current that leads to sin, misery,
and shame. When we find ourselves saying Yes, where God has said No;
when we see desirable things where God has said there is death; when
we allow distrust of Him to rankle in our mind, when we chafe
against the restrictions under which we live and seek liberty by
breaking down the fence instead of by delighting in God, we are on
the highway to all evil.
(4) If we know our own history we cannot be surprised to read that
one taste of evil ruined our first parents. It is so always. The one
taste alters our attitude towards God and conscience and life. It is
a veritable Circe’s cup. The actual experience of sin is like the
one taste of alcohol to a reclaimed drunkard, like the first taste
of blood to a young tiger, it calls out the latent devil and creates
a new nature within us. At one brush it wipes out all the peace, and
joy, and self-respect, and boldness of innocence, and numbers us
among the transgressors, among the shame-faced, and self-despising,
and hopeless. It leaves us possessed with unhappy thoughts which
lead us away from what is bright, and honourable, and good, and like
the letting out of water it seems to have tapped a spring of evil
within us. It is but one step, but it is like the step over a
precipice or down the shaft of a mine; it cannot be taken back, it
commits to an altogether different state of things.
(5) The first result of sin is shame. The form in which the
knowledge of good and evil comes to us is the knowing we are naked,
the consciousness that we are stripped of all that made us walk
unabashed before God and men. The promise of the serpent while
broken in the sense is fulfilled to the ear; the eyes of Adam and
Eve were opened and they knew that they were naked. Self-reflection
begins, and the first movement of conscience produces shame. Had
they resisted temptation, conscience would have been born, but not
in self-condemnation. Like children they had hitherto been conscious
only of what was external to themselves, but now their consciousness
of a power to choose good and evil is awakened and its first
exercise is accompanied with shame. They feel that in themselves
they are faulty, that they are not in themselves complete; that
though created by God, they are not fit for His eye. The lower
animals wear no clothes because they have no knowledge of good and
evil; children feel no need of covering because as yet
self-consciousness is latent, and their conduct is determined for
them; those who are re-made in the image of God and glorified as
Christ is, cannot be thought of as clothed, for in them there is no
sense of sin. But Adam’s clothing himself and hiding himself were
the helpless attempts of a guilty conscience to evade the judgment
of truth.
(6) But when Adam found he was no longer fit for God’s eye, God
provided a covering which might enable him again to live in His
presence without dismay. Man had exhausted his own ingenuity and
resources, and exhausted them without finding relief to his shame.
If his shame was to be effectually removed, God must do it. And the
clothing in coats of skins indicates the restoration of man, not
indeed to pristine innocence, but to peace with God. Adam felt that
God did not wish to banish him lastingly from His presence, nor to
see him always a trembling and confused penitent. The self-respect
and progressiveness, the reverence for law and order and God, which
came in with clothes, and which we associate with the civilised
races, were accepted as tokens that God was desirous to cooperate
with man, to forward and further him in all good.
It is also to be remarked that the clothing which God provided was
in itself different from what man had thought of. Adam took leaves
from an inanimate, unfeeling tree; God deprived an animal of life,
that the shame of His creature might be relieved. This was the last
thing Adam would have thought of doing. To us life is cheap and
death familiar, but Adam recognised death as the punishment of sin.
Death was to early man a sign of God’s anger. And he had to learn
that sin could be covered not by a bunch of leaves snatched from a
bush as he passed by and that would grow again next year, but only
by pain and blood. Sin cannot be atoned for by any mechanical action
nor without expenditure of feeling. Suffering must ever follow
wrongdoing. From the first sin to the last, the track of the sinner
is marked with blood. Once we have sinned we cannot regain permanent
peace of conscience save through pain, and this not only pain of our
own. The first hint of this was given as soon as conscience was
aroused in man. It was made apparent that sin was a real and deep
evil, and that by no easy and cheap process could the sinner be
restored. The same lesson has been written on millions of
consciences since. Men have found that their sin reaches beyond
their own life and person, that it inflicts injury and involves
disturbance and distress, that it changes utterly our relation to
life and to God, and that we cannot rise above its consequences save
by the intervention of God Himself, by an intervention which tells
us of the sorrow He suffers on our account.
For the chief point is that it is God who relieves man’s shame.
Until we are certified that God desires our peace of mind we cannot
be at peace. The cross of Christ is the permanent witness to this
desire on God’s part. No one can read what Christ has done for us
without feeling sure that for himself there is a way back to God
from all sin-that it is God’s desire that his sin should be covered,
his iniquity forgiven. Too often that which seems of prime
importance to God seems of very slight importance to us. To have our
life founded solidly in harmony with the Supreme seems often to
excite no desire within us. It is about sin we find man first
dealing with God, and until you have satisfied God and yourself
regarding this prime and fundamental matter of your own
transgression and wrong-doing you look in vain for any deep and
lasting growth and satisfaction. Have you no reason to be ashamed
before God? Have you loved Him in any proportion to His worthiness
to be loved? Have you cordially and habitually fallen in with His
will? Have you zealously done His work in the world? Have you fallen
short of no good He intended you should do and gave you opportunity
to do? Is there no reason for shame on your part before God? Has His
desire to cover sin no application to you? Can you not understand
His meaning when He comes to you with offers of pardon and acts of
oblivion? Surely the candid mind, the clear-judging conscience can
be at no loss to explain God’s solicitous concern for the sinner;
and must humbly own that even that unfathomable Divine emotion which
is exhibited in the cross of Christ, is no exaggerated and
theatrical demonstration, but the actual carrying through of what
was really needed for the restoration of the sinner. Do not live as
if the cross of Christ had never been, or as if you had never sinned
and had no connection with it. Strive to learn what it means; strive
to deal fairly with it and fairly with your own transgressions and
with your present actual relation to God and His will.
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